1 / 27

NISHTHA Module 8 Pedagogy of Environmental Studies (Primary Stage)

NISHTHA Module 8 Pedagogy of Environmental Studies (Primary Stage). National Council of Educational Research and Training New Delhi, India. Overview of Module. Learning Objectives of Module Environmental Studies (EVS) as a Curricular Area Curricular Expectations and Learning Outcomes in EVS

jeanette
Télécharger la présentation

NISHTHA Module 8 Pedagogy of Environmental Studies (Primary Stage)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NISHTHAModule 8Pedagogy of Environmental Studies (Primary Stage) National Council of Educational Research and Training New Delhi, India

  2. Overview of Module • Learning Objectives of Module • Environmental Studies (EVS) as a Curricular Area • Curricular Expectations and Learning Outcomes in EVS • Resources and Strategies for Teaching-Learning of EVS • Scope and Pedagogical Dimensions of the theme ‘Water’ • Suggested activities for SRGs in EVS • Feedback about Teaching and Learning of EVS by participants • Suggested Readings

  3. Learning Objectives of Module • appreciate EVS as an integrated curricular area at the Primary Stage • relate its objectives with the concepts and issues included in the syllabus • locate the concepts and issues in textbooks and be aware of different approaches to their transaction in classroom • plan and design context and need specific learning experiences for children • organize learning opportunities to engage all learners meaningfully • use varied assessment strategies to map the learning progress against learning outcomes in EVS

  4. Environmental Studies as a Curricular Area • Subject from class III to V • Integrated perspective → brings together insights from Science, Social Studies & Environmental education → for inter-related understanding to develop • Thematic approach → Six themes (Family & Friends, Food, Shelter, Water, Travel, Things we make & do) • Syllabus web moves outwards → from child’s immediate surroundings (natural, social & cultural) to wider environment (neighborhood & community at large)

  5. Curricular Expectations in EVS As per EVS curriculum, children are expected to • acquire awareness about immediate/ wider surroundings/ environment through lived experiences on various themes related to daily life • nurture natural curiosity and creativity for the immediate surroundings • develop various processes/skills through interaction with immediate surroundings • develop sensitivity for the natural, physical and human resources in the immediate environment. • point out/ raise issues related to equality, justice and respect for human dignity and rights

  6. Pedagogical Processes • Learning situations in context of children → considering their learning needs & styles • Primacy to children’s experiences → to connect these with school knowledge → active participation • Facilitate children to construct their own knowledge → to explore their existing ideas and build further upon them • Real world exposure to encounter various social issues (gender bias, marginalization, challenges of differently abled, natural concerns) • Developing basic language skills • Inclusive Resource materials, School environment & Pedagogical processes Variety in approaches, strategies & resources → to ensure that each learner gets opportunity → to observe, express, discuss, question, critically think, improvise, analyze → involving use of multiple senses in individual and group set-ups.

  7. Learning Outcomes in EVS http://www.ncert.nic.in/publication/Miscellaneous/pdf_files/tilops101.pdf

  8. Let us reflect

  9. Resources & Strategies for Teaching-Learning of EVS • Projects • Discussion • Experiments • Explorations • Surveys • Interactions/Interviews • Role Play, Story telling • Field Visits • Drawing and Craftwork • Quiz • Any other • Textbooks • Supplementary Books • e-Resources - Audio Video, Pictures, Interactives • Media, Films • Environment

  10. Some ideas ….. Projects • Find out availability of water at the time of your grandparents and parents. Compare it with the present situation. • If there is a lake, well or step well near your house or school visit it and find out more about it. Discussion • Why some people have very less water and others have it in plenty? • What would happen if you do not get water for two days?

  11. Some ideas ….. Experiments • What floats/sinks, What dissolves/does not dissolve? Surveys and Interviews • A survey of school/neighbourhood for wastage of water • Interview of any one – farmer, mason, gardener, driver, any other Role Play • A family where father/mother doing the household chores • A girl child who stays at home

  12. Activity (Cultural aspect of water) • Let us recite/sing any folk song related to water • Where did you learn this song? • What was the occasion when people sang it? Are there any specific dances related to water? Name those

  13. Activity (Cultural aspect of water) • What are the festivals in your area where water plays an important role? • How is water helpful in celebrating that particular festival? • Besides festivals, what are some other occasions/ cultural practices where water is very significant/ worshipped?

  14. Activity (Cultural aspect of water) • Have you seen people immersing statues or flowers to the water? Do people offer eatables to water? • What are some other things which people offer/ throw in water? • Do people also take a holy dip in water?

  15. Have you seen a situation like this? Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Water-crisis.jpg

  16. Discuss about this situation Source: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f3/Crisis_of_drinking_water.jpg

  17. Scarcity of Water • Method used: Picture reading, questioning and discussion • What do you observe in these pictures? • When is it difficult to get water? • What are the problems faced by the people due to water shortage? • Have you ever faced shortage of water in your house? When? What did you do then? Instead of stating or explaining the reasons, the teacher need to ask questions in such a way that the student share and learn from each others responses. Encourage all the students to participate in discussion. • Assessment: • The responses given by the students need to be analysed keeping their context in mind. • Any unique response given by the student can be recorded (anecdote) ; can be used further by the teacher. • Teacher can record how the students are observing, reasoning, respecting each others ideas, etc. using a checklist.

  18. Think & Share If your family received only two buckets of water a day, how would you prioritise the works?

  19. How do we get water?

  20. Water: Availability, Access and Distribution • Questions for discussion upon picture collage: • What are the ways by which people get water in their house? • What kind of problems some of these people might face in getting water ? • Does everyone get adequate water to drink and meet other needs? • Why do some people have it more and others not? Do you find scarcity of water in every ones life? Or there is a selective group of people who always face water shortage? • Why do some people put a pump directly in the Jal Board pipe line? Some people draw out water from the ground by deep bore wells. How far is it correct? What problems would other people face due to this? Do you have any such experience? • In some regions, water has to be fetched from far? Do only women fetch water? Should only women fetch water? • Do all people use the same source of water? Are there some people who are restricted from coming near to these water sources? Do such people have some separate sources of water? • What would happen if we had no water? • Have you seen water being wasted – how? How can we avoid it? Do you reuse water?

  21. Activity • Suggest different ways in which water can be saved/reused/ recycled at • School, or • Home You may present your suggestions in the form of poster/ song/ skit/ drawing/ slogan …….

  22. Assessment Rubric for ‘Survey to find source of wastage of water and interview people to find reasons behind it’

  23. To ponder over List out the learning outcomes which might have been achieved through the activities we have done today?

  24. Learning Outcomes targeted in Activities given in Module • Identifies sources of water and objects for storing water • Describes need, availability of water and use of water at home and surroundings • Describes roles of family members in fetching and storing water • Records observations/ experiences/ information for objects/ activities in different ways and predicts patterns in activities • Groups objects/substances which float or sink, soluble and insoluble according to differences/similarities using different senses • Guesses (properties, conditions of phenomena) and verifies using simple tools/set ups (e.g., floating and sinking/ mixing) • Creates drawings, designs, models, maps, poems and slogans • Voices opinion on social discriminatory practices in using water

  25. Group Activity Design a brief teaching-learning experience in EVS • for a particular topic and class • integrating content, pedagogy and assessment • to achieve one or more learning outcome(s)

  26. Designing an EVS lesson • Class • Theme/ Topic • Learning aspects: Key concepts, process skills, attitudes, values • Context (What does the child already know about the topic, where does the child come from, child’s interest, child’s style of learning) • Learning Objectives • Creating Learning situations • Resources needed • Assessment • Learning outcomes

  27. Thanks

More Related